Ryan Longwell best at number eight
Ryan Longwell: A kicker worth his salt
John Maxymuk, the author of “Packers by the Numbers: Jersey Numbers and the Players Who Wore them,” tells us about Longwell and his early years with the franchise:
"Ryan Longwell was not supposed to be here. He signed as an undrafted free agent in 1997 with the 49ers who were led by his college coach Steve Mariucci, but was cut early in training camp. Green Bay signed him simply as a second training camp leg. The Packers had released veteran kicker Chris Jacke in the spring and had spent a third round draft choice on Brett Conway from Penn State to replace him. Conway proceeded to miss three chip shot field goals in his first preseason game and then worked so hard in practice to correct his mistakes that he injured his leg. Given the opportunity, Longwell seized the job. Conway was put on injured reserve that year and was eventually released. He bounced around the league due to his unreliability in the clutch. Longwell, by contrast, was a model of consistency. His sharp performance saved a very embarrassing situation for the Packers who had wasted a high draft choice and a signing bonus on a kid who could not kick in the big leagues. After his first four seasons, Longwell was the most accurate kicker in league history, converting 111 of 131 field goal attempts for an 84.7 percent success rate. Remarkably, in the less-than-ideal conditions of wintry Lambeau Field his percentage was even higher. In the 2000 season he led the NFC in scoring with 131 points and kicked the first three game-winning field goals of his career. On that basis, he signed a large multi-year contract in 2001 and then went out and had the worst years of his career. He missed 11 of 31 field goal attempts which lowered his career percentage to 80.9. His point total of 104 was the lowest of his five-year career tour in Green Bay at the time."
Longwell went on to play nine years in Green Bay, scoring 1,054 of his 1,687 career points while in Packers News.
During his time with the Packers he converted 226 of 277 kicks for an 81.6 percent clip. When he moved on to Minnesota in 2006, he played six years there, hitting 135 of 157 attempts, 86 percent. Playing indoors with the Vikings, his conversion rate was much better playing in a dome, but when you consider he was still over 80 percent while kicking half of his games outdoors at Lambeau Field, that’s pretty good.
By the time he left Green Bay in 2005, he was, and still is the franchise’s all-time leading scorer, though Mason Crosby is homing in on the record.
When Longwell announced his retirement from the NFL he did so as a Green Bay Packer, making the pilgrimage back to Packers News in 2013 to make his announcement.
This is not a good way to remember Ryan Longwell, but it is one of the more significant moments in his career:
Ryan Longwell’s career statistics:
Here is the list of those Packers players who have worn #8 over the course of the past 50 years:
From | To | AV | |
---|---|---|---|
Mark Brunell | 1994 | 1994 | 0 |
Anthony Dilweg | 1989 | 1990 | 4 |
Bob Forte | 1950 | 1953 | 0 |
Ryan Longwell | 1997 | 2005 | 24 |
Tim Masthay | 2010 | 2013 | 7 |
Ray Pelfrey | 1951 | 1952 | 0 |
Max Zendejas | 1987 | 1988 | 5 |